When Americans lose their jobs, they file for unemployment benefits, and the government has kept track of the number of these filings every week for more than a half-century. Up until very recently, with a healthy domestic job market, the weekly tally has been about 210,000.
But looking at historical data, we know what things look like when there’s an economic crisis. In early 2009, for example, near the height of the Great Recession, initial jobless claims reached 665,000 — roughly triple the totals from, say, a couple of months ago. During the U.S. recession in 1982, the number was a little higher, reaching nearly 700,000.
I mention these numbers in order to provide some important context for what’s about to happen.
David Choi, an economist from Goldman Sachs, says initial claims for the week ending March 21 may jump to a seasonally adjusted 2.25 million. His analysis is based on recent anecdotes from press reports as well as company announcements. Over 30 states have provided preliminary data.
This is, of course, an estimate, and the actual number could be better or worse. But the preliminary rough tally helps capture the severity of the circumstances: the worst report from recent history showed about 700,000 first-time unemployment filings, and it’s reasonable to think next week’s report will be three times worse.
Imagine in baseball that the single-season homerun record was 61. Then imagine someone came along and hit 200. It wouldn’t just be surprising; it wouldn’t just set a new record; it would be a number at odds with our perception of reality.








